Alcohol-Related Disparities Among Women: Evidence and Potential Explanations.

IF 6.8 1区 医学 Q1 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Alcohol Research : Current Reviews Pub Date : 2020-09-03 eCollection Date: 2020-01-01 DOI:10.35946/arcr.v40.2.09
Nina Mulia, Kara M Bensley
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Although research on alcohol-related disparities among women is a highly understudied area, evidence shows that racial/ethnic minority women, sexual minority women, and women of low socioeconomic status (based on education, income, or residence in disadvantaged neighborhoods) are more likely to experience alcohol-related problems. These problems include alcohol use disorder, particularly after young adulthood, and certain alcohol-related health, morbidity, and mortality outcomes. In some cases, disparities may reflect differences in alcohol consumption, but in other cases such disparities appear to occur despite similar and possibly lower levels of consumption among the affected groups. To understand alcohol-related disparities among women, several factors should be considered. These include age; the duration of heavy drinking over the life course; the widening disparity in cumulative socioeconomic disadvantage and health in middle adulthood; social status; sociocultural context; genetic factors that affect alcohol metabolism; and access to and quality of alcohol treatment services and health care. To inform the development of interventions that might mitigate disparities among women, research is needed to identify the factors and mechanisms that contribute most to a group's elevated risk for a given alcohol-related problem.

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妇女中与酒精有关的差异:证据和潜在解释。
尽管对妇女中与酒精有关的差异的研究是一个极不充分的领域,但有证据表明,少数种族/族裔妇女、性少数群体妇女和社会经济地位低下的妇女(基于教育、收入或居住在贫困社区)更有可能遇到与酒精有关的问题。这些问题包括酒精使用障碍,尤其是在年轻成年之后,以及某些与酒精相关的健康、发病和死亡结果。在某些情况下,差异可能反映了酒精消费的不同,但在另一些情况下,尽管受影响群体的酒精消费水平相似,甚至可能更低,但这种差异似乎仍然存在。要了解妇女中与酒精相关的差异,应考虑几个因素。这些因素包括:年龄;一生中大量饮酒的持续时间;社会经济劣势累积与中年期健康之间日益扩大的差距;社会地位;社会文化背景;影响酒精代谢的遗传因素;以及获得酒精治疗服务和医疗保健的机会和质量。为了为制定干预措施提供信息,以减少妇女之间的差异,需要开展研究,以确定哪些因素和机制对某一群体酗酒相关问题的风险升高起到最大作用。
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期刊介绍: Alcohol Research: Current Reviews (ARCR) is an open-access, peer-reviewed journal published by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) at the National Institutes of Health. Starting from 2020, ARCR follows a continuous, rolling publication model, releasing one virtual issue per yearly volume. The journal offers free online access to its articles without subscription or pay-per-view fees. Readers can explore the content of the current volume, and past volumes are accessible in the journal's archive. ARCR's content, including previous titles, is indexed in PubMed, PsycINFO, Scopus, and Web of Science.
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